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Our Divine Mediator Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22

Our Divine Mediator

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Our Divine Mediator. Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22. Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Introduction. Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Introduction. Definitions of Mediator: One that reconciles differences between disputants . (Dictionary.com) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Our Divine Mediator

Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22

Page 2: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Introduction

Page 3: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Introduction

Definitions of Mediator:1. One that reconciles differences between

disputants. (Dictionary.com)

2. One who mediates between two parties to remove a disagreement or reach a common goal. (Arndt-Gingrich Greek-English Lexicon)

3. One who interposes between two contending parties, with their consent, for the purpose of assisting them in settling their differences. (Bouvier’s Law Dictionary)

Page 4: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Introduction

The Nature of the Dispute:• We have set up huge barriers between

ourselves and God.• God desires to remove them. • His holiness requires that a price be paid from

the human side to atone for our many sins.• We owe God more than we can honestly pay.• We are in over our heads.

Page 5: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Introduction

The Nature of the Settlement:• God initiates the process through Christ.• Christ settles the differences between God

and His aggressively disobedient children, by dying for our sins.

• He has formally sealed our reconciliation with God by an eternal covenant in His own blood.

• Christ is our Divine Mediator.

Page 6: Our Divine Mediator

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between

a rebellious human race and a perfectly Holy God.

Page 7: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Outline

Page 8: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Outline

I. The New Covenant Was Prophesied. 8:6-13II. The New Covenant Was Needed.

9:1-10III. The New Covenant Is Effective. 9:11-15IV. The New Covenant Has Been Sealed. 9:16-22

Page 9: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Outline

I. The New Covenant Was Prophesied. 8:6-13II. The New Covenant Was Needed. 9:1-10III. The New Covenant Is Effective. 9:11-15IV. The New Covenant Has Been Sealed. 9:16-22

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between a rebellious human race and a

perfectly Holy God.

Page 10: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Prophesied 8:6-13

Page 11: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Prophesied 8:6-13

• Things God Promised to Israel as part of the New Covenant in Jeremiah 31:31-34:– Inward change (8:10)– Intimate relationship (8:10)– National conversion (someday) (8:11)– Complete purification (8:12)

• Though our rabbi is writing to Jewish believers, this is the covenant under which God accepts all of us into His family.

Page 12: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Prophesied 8:6-13

• Weaknesses of the Old Covenant:– Limited In Its Power: It gave instruction regarding

God’s will without providing the power to do it.– Incomplete In Its Effects: It provided only for

ceremonial (not moral) cleansing and stopped short of inward transformation.

– Temporary In Its Duration: It was useful for a specific time and place, but was always intended to point us to Christ.

Page 13: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Prophesied 8:6-13

• Strengths of the New Covenant:– Unrestricted In Its Power: It has the power to

reconcile anyone with God, regardless of present condition.

– Complete In Its Effects: It transforms us by making us new creatures in Christ.

– Eternal In Its Duration: It gives us eternal life, encouraging us to look past this present fallen creation, tainted as it is by our sin.

Page 14: Our Divine Mediator

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between

a rebellious human race and a perfectly Holy God.

Page 15: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Needed 9:1-10

Page 16: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Needed 9:1-10

• 9:1 This section describes the tabernacle, which Moses & Co. built in the wilderness.

• 9:2 The first room was the Holy Place.• 9:3-5 The next room was the Holy of Holies.• 9:6 The Holy Place was the setting for daily

and weekly service.• 9:7-8 The Holy of Holies was only entered on

the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur).

Page 17: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Needed 9:1-10

• 9:9-10 Here the rabbi reminds us that all of this was only symbolic.

• It could never perfect the conscience of the priests or the people.

• A time of reformation had to come.

Page 18: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Needed 9:1-10

Limitations Under the Old Covenant:• Limited Access: Only the priests could enter the

tabernacle. Only the high priest could enter the holiest place and that only briefly once a year.

• Limited Purification: The cleansing was purely ceremonial, it did not remove guilt.

• Limited Pardon: No offering was provided for intentional sin. – See Numbers 15:27-31.

Page 19: Our Divine Mediator

It Was Needed 9:1-10

• By Old Covenant standards, we now have an enormous problem.

• I have sinned intentionally, knowingly, deliberately, presumptuously.

• And so have you.• Read Numbers 15:30-31 again.• We need a better covenant than this.

Page 20: Our Divine Mediator

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between

a rebellious human race and a perfectly Holy God.

Page 21: Our Divine Mediator

It Is Effective 9:11-15

Page 22: Our Divine Mediator

It Is Effective 9:11-15

• 9:12 eternal redemption• Redemption in this context is the language of

the slave market. • The implication is that we were in bondage to

sin with no way to free ourselves.• Christ has bought our freedom for all eternity.• The word “once for all” gives the sense of

“once and only once,” once, not repeatedly.

Page 23: Our Divine Mediator

It Is Effective 9:11-15

• Hebrews 9:12 (NLT) “With his own blood—not the blood of goats and calves—he entered the Most Holy Place once for all time and secured our redemption forever.”

Page 24: Our Divine Mediator

It Is Effective 9:11-15

• Advantages of the New Covenant:• It secures our redemption: No animal sacrifice

could really pay the price for our sins.• It cleanses our conscience: No good works of

ours would ever be good enough.• It empowers us for service: Once we remove

any intended merit from our works, we are genuinely free to serve God.

Page 25: Our Divine Mediator

It Is Effective 9:11-15

9:14 The word “serve” is related to the word “worshipers” in 10:2.• Service and worship are linked:

“Gratitude for our redemption must also express itself is willing surrender to God’s will and loving devotion to God’s work.”

– Raymond Brown, former principal, Spurgeon’s College, London

Page 26: Our Divine Mediator

It Is Effective 9:11-15

“Purity is not the end but the means of the new life. The end of restored fellowship is energetic service to Him Who alone lives and gives life. The thought of performing certain actions is replaced by that of fulfilling a personal relation.”

– B. F. Westcott (1825-1901) Professor of Divinity, U. of Cambridge

and Bishop of Durham

Page 27: Our Divine Mediator

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between

a rebellious human race and a perfectly Holy God.

Page 28: Our Divine Mediator

It Has Been Sealed 9:16-22

• The rabbi will give us three illustrations:– One from civil law.– Two from Old Testament ceremonial law.

Page 29: Our Divine Mediator

It Has Been Sealed 9:16-22

• 9:16-17 This makes perfect sense to the rabbi teaching in Greek.

• The word “covenant” is not only “a formal agreement,” but also carries the idea of “a last will and testament.”

• It is something of a play on words.

Page 30: Our Divine Mediator

It Has Been Sealed 9:16-22

• 9:16-17 The rabbi shows that Christ’s death puts the New Covenant into effect, as if its stipulations were His last will and testament toward those who survived Him.

• This is, of course, not your typical “testament.”• People don’t normally rise from the dead

immediately afterward to share in the new arrangements.

Page 31: Our Divine Mediator

It Has Been Sealed 9:16-22

• 9:16-17 Covenant and testament, in the “last will and testament” sense, are the same word in Greek. This is why our Bible contains the Old Testament and New Testament.

• We might just as easily call them the Old Covenant and the New Covenant.

• Someone used the word testament a long time ago and we’ve just stuck with it.

Page 32: Our Divine Mediator

It Has Been Sealed 9:16-22

• 9:18-20 The rabbi reminds us of what happened in Exodus 24:3-8, when the Old Covenant was sealed by the sprinkling of the blood of animal sacrifices.

• 9:21 In Exodus 29 the altar, Aaron’s robes and even Aaron & sons were anointed with the blood of sacrifices for ritual cleansing.

Page 33: Our Divine Mediator

It Has Been Sealed 9:16-22

• 9:22 Under the Old Covenant blood was the means of ritual purification.

• It was the revealed means by which cleansing from sin was obtained.– See Leviticus 17:11

• Thus Christ, by shedding His blood and dying, seals the New Covenant, accomplishing for us what we could never do ourselves.

Page 34: Our Divine Mediator

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between

a rebellious human race and a perfectly Holy God.

Page 35: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

Page 36: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

The Priority of Bible Study.• Hebrews contains some complex topics.• They are made simpler through a consistent

study of the Scriptures.• Bible study offers the joy of daily reassurance.• Habitual Bible study promises a more

satisfying relationship with God as deeper truths become clearer and more precious.

Page 37: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

The Reality of Forgiveness:• Read 8:12 and 9:13-14 again.• When God says our sins are cleansed and

forgotten, He means it.• The devil wants to keep us in bondage to guilt

over past sins and present weaknesses.• God offers forgiveness and real power to

move forward, leaving our sins behind us.

Page 38: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

The Joy of Sacred Service:• The word “service” in 9:14 has been described

as “the service of a sacred ministry of complete surrender” (Westcott).

• Related to “worshipers” in 10:2• The NLT translates this as “worship” in 9:14.• See also the same word in Revelation 22:3. • ESV and NLT translate it as “worship” there.

Page 39: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

The Significance of Christ’s Blood:• We can lessen the value of the cross by taking

the focus off of Christ shedding His blood for our sins.

• People emphasize Christ’s role as a moral example, rather than a Mediator between a holy God and lost humanity.

Page 40: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

The Significance of Christ’s Blood:• This does make Jesus more palatable to some,

but it does so by robbing the New Testament of its core message, namely:

• Christ settles the differences between God and His aggressively disobedient children, by dying for our sins.

• Christ is our Divine Mediator.

Page 41: Our Divine Mediator

Hebrews 8:6 – 9:22 Conclusions

The gospel contains some features so alien to modern thought that it will always appear “folly” … however hard we strive (and rightly) to show that it is “true and reasonable.” The cross will always constitute an assault on human self-righteousness and a challenge to human self-indulgence. Its “scandal” (stumbling-block) simply cannot be removed.

– John Stott (1921-2011)

Page 42: Our Divine Mediator

Christ our Divine Mediator has sealed a New Covenant between

a rebellious human race and a perfectly Holy God.